Global energy crisis deepens; efforts to plug supply gap fall short, industry executives warn
"These are not even stopgap measures," Sheikh Nawaf Al-Sabah, CEO of Kuwait Petroleum Corp, said on Tuesday.
Kuwait was producing some 2.6 million barrels per day of oil before the war and has had to reduce production and halt deliveries to refiners that buy its crude.
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have kept some exports flowing from pipelines that bypass the Strait of Hormuz. But those exports, as well as the other emergency measures, do not come close to covering the supply disruption, Al-Sabah said.
All told, the emergency measures were not even a "drop in the proverbial barrel," he said.
Coordinated releases from strategic reserves were not enough to fix supply shortages, said Takehiko Matsuo, Japan's Vice Minister for International Affairs. His country is contributing some 80 million barrels to the strategic stock release coordinated by the International Energy Agency. Japan has roughly three weeks of gas in storage, he said.
Supply shortages could hit Europe in April if the war continues, German economy minister Katherina Reiche and Shell CEO Wael Sawan both said.
"We are trying to work with governments to just alert them to the various levers they will need to pull, including on the demand side, including what they need to do around storage, what they need to do around purchasing," Sawan said.
Lack of preparation has exacerbated the challenges for Europe and other parts of the world, he added.
"The problem is we are more in reaction mode," said Sawan. "The best energy strategies are the strategies that actually look five, 10 years out and build resilience from now."
It would be difficult for operators in the U.S., the largest oil-producing nation, to lift output in a meaningful way until 2027 regardless of prices, ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance said.
U.S. producers are executing spending plans they laid out earlier this year and cannot easily adjust them, Lance said.
The U.S. is also the world's largest producer of liquefied natural gas. But U.S. LNG producers cannot compensate for the supply shortfall from the Middle East because they are already at maximum output, said Matt Schatzman, CEO of U.S. LNG producer NextDecade.
"None of this is going to be solved overnight," he said. "This is a bad situation. You don't think we would go faster if we could?"
No comments
Share your thoughts! Tell us your name and class for a gift (: